The true seals are slow moving animals on land. Their appendages are not designed for efficient locomotion on land and they drag their body forward, not so much walk while on land. However, their cousins the sea lions and the fur seals have longer front flippers and rear flippers that fold forward to give them better locomotion. As far as specific speed you'd have to be more specific regarding the species, but generally answer your question; true seals are slow.
they are called flippers
by lifting their legs and then putting them down again
Turtles don't have flippers. They have webbed feet that are in between their toes. But if I were you I would look at it because they can scratch! Alternate answer: Sea turtles have flippers. Sea turtles have two front flippers located at the front of their body near the head and they have two back flippers located at the rear of the body near the tail.
A turtle paddles its flippers.
Seals (several species) have flippers, not hooves.
Their hind flippers are for propelling them and their front flippers are for steering.
Seals do not have any legs they only have flippers.
Too get away from predators.
Okay, this question makes no sense. Swans do not have any flippers. Only seals and dolphins and animals like that have flippers.
The harbor seal has flippers instead of limbs.
The Harp seal is a true seal. It has no ear flaps and uses its rear flippers for propulsion and its front flippers for steering. And most Artic seals are True seals.
Seals have flippers while fish have fins. They are derived from the same structures but used by different classifications.
Seals evolved these features to become more hydrodynamic.
Some have flippers like seals and whales :d
The harbor seal has flippers instead of limbs.
widest point is their shoulders. they have a long slender body, and they have flippers on their sides with claws. and they have back flippers.